Pinwheels are from America?

Whoa, based on some history lesson picked up from the world wide web, Pinwheels may have arrived in America by way of immigrants from Europe. The first recorded evidence of their existence in the U.S. is related to George Washington, who carried whirligigs home from the Revolutionary War. By the 18th century wooden, wind-driven whirligigs existed as weather vanes with moving parts set in motion by the wind.

Wait, what? There’s a place in Seremban filled with 20,000 pinwheels?!

TELL ME MORE!

It's in Seremban guys!

If you had fun playing with one pinwheel, how about having fields of beautiful, colourful pinwheels spinning around (say what?!). This is no time to get too serious, heck in fact, you’re encouraged to play, so forget about being all prim and proper, and get crazy! Snap loads of Instagrammable pictures, you know you want to.

Let the wind spin your from your sad [sic] life of illusions to a dazzling reality ! We visited Iringan Bayu over at Seremban the other day, and it’s a whole load of fun for the family, we promise you! Don’t go alone, bring your friends, your partner, your crush, your family, your kids, even your grandma and grandpa, coz’ this place is the BOMB!

How do you get there? You must be thanking your lucky stars now because you found our site yes?

Just head to the address below, or waze “Iringan Bayu Seremban”. See you there!